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Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 10:31 am
A couple of blog entries of interest to me, re: politics and faith.


So you’re thinking of voting for a pro-choice candidate...
: Christian writer, I can't remember OTOH if she calls herself Evangelical or not, but I've found her posts thought provoking in the past.

Pro-life and voting for Hillary: Christian blogger, probably not Evangelical. I came across this one skipping through links, and I am liking what she has to say as well as how she says it: mother of non-neurotypical children, rape survivor, social justice warrior.

Personally, I'm fully behind abortion being accessible and legal, sex education that does more than the mechanics of sex (consent, pleasure in sex - including how to achieve it, sexuality as personal and societal identity, and the consequences of intimacy should be addressed for both boys and girls, whatever orientation), and contraceptives/morning after pills being freely available at chemists/pharmacies. (The issue of not selling contraceptives 'because it goes against my religion' hasn't come up in Australia, so far as I've heard in the mainstream media.) But many of the people from my churches tend to take the very simplistic views that tend to be epitomised by the US Evangelicals: baby = good, abortion = bad.

I wish people didn't need abortions - but doesn't everyone? And then the solution to that is surely to put all the possible blocks in place to keep conception from happening when you don't want it to happen? And sure, I believe firmly in abstention as a personal choice, and and in sex as a tool towards intimacy rather than as mere physical release. But, you know, not everyone else does! And so long as they're not trying to push sex on me, I don't feel like pushing abstention on them.

Uh. So that was a soapbox.

But. I'm finding it kind of interesting watching the whole Hillary vs. Trump circus. And, I guess, how, well, precious some Americans are about the sanctity of their choices. Like, it's a permanent moral failing to vote for the lesser evil and you should be ashamed of yourself for even considering it.

eg. Maureen Dowd on The Perfect GOP Nominee.

For someone who has to vote for the lesser evil all the time (it's called Mandatory Voting) this feels awfully like a kid whining that they don't have coloured sprinkles on their ice-cream, only caramel sauce: my sympathy level is pretty much nil.

Frankly, even Australia's "left-wing party", The Greens, don't represent me in everything. But the big things - the things that we, as a society, can't afford to let slide - are more important than me and my personal like or dislike of some of the fine print, and some of the wingnuts out there grandstanding.

Finally, for a bit of humour, let's go back to 2012 and the article "The Aussie System Gets My Vote by Annabel Crabb, political correspondent with a marvellous wit (her TV series Kitchen Cabinet features all stripes and kinds of politicians at home and in the kitchen - can you imagine this in the US? *HILARITY*). It's mostly about mandatory voting, which is certainly easier with 24 million than with 270 million, but there's a small nudge in there about dull-and-plodding getting the job done while flash-and-sizzle kind of turns everything into showbiz.

King George III voice: "President Donald Trump... Good luck!"
Tags:
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 02:04 am (UTC)
I really just don't get the "if we ban abortion it will go away" thing. It was illegal for much of the last century, and what it led to was illegal abortions, not no abortions, which is bad for everyone.

Which preaching to the choir, but my gran who was a nurse for 40+ years was always vocally pro abortion access because she'd seen what happens when backroom ones go wrong.

I really really wish Canada would switch to pro-rep. We're only 30+ million. It'd be doable.
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 03:20 am (UTC)
(Your second link isn't working.)

And, I guess, how, well, precious some Americans are about the sanctity of their choices. Like, it's a permanent moral failing to vote for the lesser evil and you should be ashamed of yourself for even considering it.

Totally. I haven't ever found a political party that I 100% agree with - and I don't ever expect to.
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 05:26 am (UTC)
It has tielan.dreamwidth.org on the front.
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 04:24 am (UTC)
The second link's not working for me, either.
Like you, I really like the australian system, so much so that I opposed the recent change in how to vote Senate preferences. I can see some advantage in that now; the double dissolution was a bad plan, though.
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 05:03 am (UTC)
No, or only partly. It takes me to a page with a picture of a dark-haired woman on it (t-shirt says Shannon) but on that page is a message saying:
"We couldn't find the page you were looking for. This is either because:

There is an error in the URL entered into your web browser. Please check the URL and try again.
The page you are looking for has been moved or deleted."
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 05:06 am (UTC)
Nope. It goes to her site, but not to the essay.
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 05:29 am (UTC)
I really like the change to Senate voting. It means I can number preferences without having to keep going to the entire 100 - much more achievable. (The previous election was the only time I voted above the line, because the voting form was so huge I was exhausted just thinking about it.)
Wednesday, August 17th, 2016 05:53 am (UTC)
Yes - that's one of the advantages I was seeing; it means fewer informals because of mistakes, for one thing. It also allows some candidates to get no preferences at all in the tally, which has both benefits and drawbacks. I did appreciate being able to leave some candidates right out; on the other hand there's clearly positives in having a political system where a rank outsider (Ricky Muir, who has surprised everybody, including me) has some chance.
Thursday, August 18th, 2016 11:39 am (UTC)
So did I, and then had to call for a rubber and go back and do it all again, because I got to the end and was one short. (shame!)